Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Manhattan this week to film three interviews, while her vice president, Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minnesota), will be campaigning in Los Angeles.
With 30 days until Election Day, Harris and Walz are spending precious time traveling to deep-blue strongholds rather than campaigning in battleground states.
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Harris will sit in on a softball interview with Democratic allies Howard Stern, Stephen Colbert and TV hosts. the view, new york times Reid J. Epstein reported Sunday. Waltz will appear on ABC on Tuesday jimmy kimmel live.
Neither Harris nor Walz have given many interviews, but the timing of their scheduled appearances comes at a critical time, when voters in some states have already begun casting their votes.
Polls show Harris and former President Donald Trump in a close race in seven of the battleground states, including North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.
of times Harris' election strategy was reported as follows.
With less than a month until Election Day, voters in several battleground states are receiving absentee ballots by mail, increasing exposure on TV, radio and podcasts.
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Harris' campaign had previously announced that Harris and Walz would appear in an interview on the CBS News program “60 Minutes” scheduled to air Monday night. The campaign also announced that Harris will participate in a Univision town hall event in Las Vegas on Thursday.
The vice president also recorded an interview on “Call Her Daddy,” a popular podcast about sex, dating, and relationships. The interview will focus on abortion rights and other women's issues and will be released Sunday night.
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Axios reported on September 19 that Harris-Waltz's ticket had the fewest interviews by a major party presidential candidate “in modern U.S. history.” It reported that Harris has a “fear of saying the wrong thing in a one-on-one television interview with a journalist.” She says, “We tend to obscure clear ideas with words and phrases that have no clear meaning.” Times” Reported by Rebecca Davis O'Brien.
Critics say Harris is an empty political shell willing to do and say whatever it takes to get elected, leading her to fear “the fear of saying the wrong thing.” He claims to be holding it.
A recent survey found that a near majority of Americans (48%) believe that Harris is just saying what people want to hear, but that Harris is only saying what they believe. Only 36% of people think this is true. economist/YouGov poll Found.





